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Me: Erik, I’m going to start out with an odd question. Tell me about spontaneous combustion. What’s up with that?

Jamie: When you said odd question, he leaned forward—he’s sitting in front of the camera this time so I had to turn my head—and he put his elbows on his knees and he took the hat he’s wearing and he kind of went whoosh. (She mimics Erik turning his hat to the side.) Like goofy hat. The bill (pause)—Sorry, we’re bantering and it’s very inappropriate. (to Erik) Spontaneous combustion, please get on track.

(Pause)

Jamie (to Erik): Where? (to me, arms out, pulling on her sleeve) He says, “There’s no magic up in here.” He doesn’t even have long sleeves on, but he’s pretending like he does.

Erik: Spontaneous combustion is real. What do you think about that? (He points his two index fingers to each other in front of his chest like some sort of gangster move.)

Me: All right. It’s a form of death, so what exactly happens that goes wrong?

Erik: Hey, what makes you think that it’s wrong?

Me: Well what makes it different from other forms of death as far as the separation of the soul from the body? Is that part of what it is? It’s just different?

(Pause)

Me: Plus, it’s wrong when you’re the one who’s being burnt to death, so…

Erik: Nah, nah, nah. If you leave that way, you totally signed up for that.

Jamie: The way he’s explaining it is when you drive in a car and you’re putting on the brakes—and there’s different ways to put on the brakes. You can ease on them. You can be that choppy braker. (She makes her hand, palm down, into a pretend brake and says, “Eh, eh, eh.”) Or if you’re going at a big speed, you just slam it, and you lock it down and you skid and they burn and smoke comes out and your car is just totally wondering what the hell you’re doing.

Erik: Spontaneous combustion is almost as if the body doesn’t recognize what the soul is doing and it’s shutting down all systems.

Jamie: He’s talking about it creating a friction and a heat. He’s comparing it to a chemical reaction.

(Pause)

Jamie (to Erik, irritated): Yes, I’m paraphrasing. Cut me some slack!

(Pause)

Jamie: Apparently the floor is yours, Elisa.

Me: Well, is it something about the way it disconnects from the cells?

Erik: Yeah, and that’s what creates the friction.

Me: How does the friction work there? It’s not like rubbing your hands together.

Erik: Mm mm. No. It’s more of, uh, the energy moves so quickly that it creates this side force of pressure and heat. Keeping it simple.

Jamie: Thank you.

Me: Oh, okay. Well thank you for dumbing it down for us.

******************

Dear Reader,

The journey on which you’re about to embark will take you through stories that are deeply personal and involves a relationship between a mother and her son.

As a physician raised by two atheists, I had no personal belief system about life after death. In a word, I was a confirmed skeptic. As my journey progressed, my mind opened. It is my sincerest hope that yours will open as well and that you will have a greater understanding of your own life and what’s to come ahead.

Although Erik sometimes paints a rosy picture of the afterlife, time and time again he stresses that suicide is not the answer to one’s problems. If you struggle, please understand that the information in my blog and my book is no substitute for professional help. Please click here for a list of resources for help when you find yourself considering taking your own life. Know that they are readily available when you feel that hopelessness and despair that many of us feel from time to time in our lives.

I refuse all donations and ad revenue on the blog. It is my dream to one day establish a nonprofit organization that delivers a variety of spiritual services for those who have lost loved ones to suicide and cannot afford that assistance on their own. It’s a mission of love, sacrifice, and dedication.

Love and light,

Elisa

Please Share:

Spontaneous human combustion has always been the most fascinating phenomenon for me, so I really appreciate this answer.

We’ve all seen the photos of the woman in the rocking chair, the only thing left were her shoes and maybe a leg bone. How about that case about the man who just burned up standing in his bathroom? The heat was so intense, he melted right through the floor into the level below him. And how do we as humans explain it? “Cigarettes.”

HSB

This post actually made me giggle a bit. I wonder what makes someone sign up for this. Like, did they experience all other forms of death in previous lives so they want to try something different this time for kicks? “Well, in my last 10 lives I died by drowning, accident, fire, hanging, illness, falling off a building, stabbing, poison, beheading, and got mauled by a bear. What’s left? I know, spontaneous combustion!”*
*By no means do I want to make fun of the death process but if death is planned in advance, then perhaps our higher selves can have a kind of perverse sense of humor about it.

Thord Skjærpe

Just wanted to share another perspective on this from Bashar (a channeled ET) where someone asked about Cobalt in monatomic form. I would NOT reccommend trying to experiment with cobalt of course.

Bashar: In monatomic form you will find that when ingested in small, small, small, small, small, small, small, small amounts. . . ten to thirty milligrams only, ten to thirty milligrams only; this is your WARNING, WARNING, WARNING – ten to thirty milligrams of monatomic cobalt only. In the human form in its
present state will build up within you a type of thermal regulation system that will allow your energy field to be greatly enhanced, greatly accelerated. More than that will actually engender spontaneous combustion. Do you understand?

Q: Does that have a relation to the blue color?
B: Yes. It is highly electromagnetheric and more than that, your physical bodies at this state of your evolution CANNOT sustain. You will find that some of the instances of, what you call, your spontaneous human combustion are because there are certain build-ups of monatomic elements of this
nature in your body; and when the earth’s magnetic field fluctuates up and down in certain ways it, shall we say, piggybacks with the frequencies of those monatomic elements in the body and when the earth’s magnetic field rises in frequency, it pulls that frequency up and “poof”goes your body. (AUD: laughter)

Q: Flux collapse?
B: Flux collapse, yes, because it cannot sustain, it cannot keep up with that elevation in frequency to that degree, so you get out of phase; and when you get out of phase there is the flux collapse and, again, colloquially speaking, “poof.” (AUD: more laughter) From the inside out as you have observed in cases of spontaneous combustion. The heat does not come from outside, it comes from inside. Every single cell disrupts and collapses and increases their electromagnetic amperage, sometimes by a factor of ten million. Then, of course, as it disintegrates there is nothing to carry the heat and so it dissipates quite rapidly and rarely affects the surrounding environment to any great degree. Which is why the body will burn but not the chair that it is sitting in. You understand?

Q: Yes.
B: Because there is immediate disintegration and therefore nothing to carry the heat.

what causes the disconnection?? a thought, a feeling, a cellular whoops? why does spontaneous combustion happen?
i heard on the radio where a guy said he was walking in a meadow on a nice clear day when he noticed a waviness or disturbance in the air across the meadow from him and then got the feeling that he should get outta there, that whatever was causing the wavy air could cause spontaneous combustion. is it an interdimensional thing, a being or anomaly?

MY SON AND THE AFTERLIFE

ABOUT CHANNELING ERIK

On October 6, 2009, my 20-year-old son Erik, took his own life. Since that sad and tragic day, an overwhelming sense of grief and despair propelled me into a search for answers. Answers that would provide me and others with comfort and hope. Some of those answers came from the many books I bought, but many came from an unexpected source…Erik, himself. read the story »

WHERE TO START

Then, I suggest you start with the very first post. In doing so you can follow my journey just as I did, through the inexplicable, inconceivable, and yet utterly undeniable surprises that I have encountered since my son''s death.